Camera and image quality

The vivo V7+ comes with a 16MP camera on its back with a f/2.0 aperture lens and a LED flash. On the front, however, is a 24MP sensor with f/2.0 lens, also with a LED flash, and capable of simulated bokeh effect.

The camera app interface is simple, yet functional and will be familiar to anyone who's picked up an iPhone. Swiping left and right (or up and down in landscape orientation) switches between basic stills, beautification mode, and video. The flash toggle, front camera switch, and a mode selector are up top in portrait, so they pretty much require you to use both hands.

Photo enthusiasts will be pleased to find a Professional mode, and it's one of the better-made ones we've seen. It gives you access to a lot of manual controls, including exposure compensation (-2EV/+2EV in 1/3EV increments), ISO sensitivity (all the way up to ISO 3200), shutter speed (as long as 16s), white balance by presets and manual focus.

You can enable Live Photos if you like.

Camera UI

The V7+ captures overall likable photos with sufficient detail, though it is missing some definition in intricate high-frequency detail like foliage. Colors are pleasantly saturated, a little warm too, but in a good way, if you will. There are noticeable traces of noise, especially in the skies, but nothing that much to get in the way of fine detail. Dynamic range is decent, and we rarely had to resort to the dedicated HDR mode.

vivo V7+ 16MP camera samples

And here are some low-light photos. The V7+ produced grainy shots that wasn't something to write home about. There is lots of noise, average detail, and the autofocus sometimes misses the target. Still, those should do for the social networks.

vivo V7+ low-light 16MP samples

Our Photo compare tool is a good place to check out how the V7+ fares against any competitors in the controlled environment of our test lab.

vivo V7+ vs. Oppo F5 vs. vivo V5+ in our photo compare tool

HDR

There is Auto HDR on the V7+ and we suggest leaving it on. We found it very smart as it fires an HDR shot whenever necessary. Vivo's approach to HDR processing is mature, preserving instead of blowing the highlights, and bringing more detail in the shadows. It also lowers the noise in those dark corners, which is another reason to rely on the Auto HDR mode.

HDR off • HDR on • HDR off • HDR on

Panorama

Panoramas are tall around the flagship-grade 3,200px, and there's a good amount of resolved detail. There are no visible stitching issues (with stationary subjects), and exposure is even across the frame. The colors are very pleasant, too.

vivo V7+ panorama

Selfie camera

Once again, we would like to call the 24MP front facing shooter of the vivo V7+ its primary camera. It has an f/2.0 lens and a soft LED flash. Of course, the highlight of the selfies is the bokeh effect in spite of the omission of a secondary selfie sensor.

Buffing • Skin Tone • Whitening • Effects work in Portrait mode, too

If you'd expected stunning selfie shots, well, you'd get them with the V7+. The resolved detail in the 24MP selfies is way above average, the contrast is great, the dynamic range is good, and the colors are lively. You can choose from a variety of beautification tweaks, but if you want the most detail, you should stick to the normal shots. The V7+ has one of the best selfie snappers around in terms of image quality.

Vivo v7+ 24MP selfies

The V7+ may lack a secondary sensor for the bokeh shots, but it still does way better in detecting and separating the person from the background than, say, Huawei's latest flagships, which is an impressive achievement right there. Sure, you can notice the processing tries to mask the borders with some forced blur, but this actually improves the effect instead of hurting it. Overall, the V7+ does not only has a great selfie camera, it does one of the best selfie portraits we've seen, too.

Vivo V7+ 24MP portrait selfies with bokeh effect

Video camera

The vivo V7+ shoots videos in up to 1080p resolution at 30fps. There's no 60fps smooth motion mode. All videos from the V7+'s camera are captured in an MP4 container. The video bitrate is about 17Mpbs, and the framerate is stable. The audio recorded in the video is stereo - it uses an AAC codec with 128 Kbps bitrate and 48 KHz sampling.

The resolved detail is enough, though we've seen better. The contrast and colors are fine, and the dynamic range is above average. Here is a sample we've uploaded on YouTube.